Supply
in sentence
3107 examples of Supply in a sentence
The key to energy security is diversity – of pipelines as well as sources of
supply.
The retail giant Wal-Mart is driving emissions reduction throughout its
supply
chain.
Nonetheless, for those who can
supply
their babies with at least six months of breast milk, the benefits are significant.
The effect of quantitative easing on exchange rates between the dollar and the floating-rate currencies is a predictable result of the Fed’s plan to increase the
supply
of dollars.
But, intended or not, the increased
supply
of dollars also affects the international value of the dollar.
The Fed’s policy of increasing the
supply
of dollars also increases investors’ concern about the future rate of inflation in the US.
The world’s major powers are far more interdependent financially and in terms of
supply
chains than they were in 1914 – the year of misguided optimism that pessimists love to cite – and the cumulative horrors of the twentieth century have fundamentally changed the normative environment.
There is no end in sight to the Syrian nightmare, the respite in eastern Ukraine may be proving temporary, and in Sino-Japanese relations cool heads remain in short
supply.
It has been several years since private investors and states began buying and leasing millions of hectares of farmland worldwide in order to secure their domestic
supply
of food, raw commodities, and biofuels, or to get subsidies for carbon storage through plantations.
The promotion of large-scale land investment is based on the belief that combating hunger requires boosting food production, and that
supply
has been lagging because of a lack of investment in agriculture.
So far, most discussions in Europe regarding how to reduce Russian energy imports – which account for 34% of the EU’s gas consumption – have focused on the United States, where the rapid development of shale reserves has made a huge
supply
of gas available for export.
Given the magnitude of the contraction in credit
supply
following the financial crisis of the late 1990’s, it is no surprise that government spending failed to restore growth.
The deadly trade in conflict resources is facilitated by
supply
chains that feed major consumer markets, such as the European Union and the United States, with cash flowing back the other way.
The Securities and Exchange Commission requires companies that use tantalum, tin, gold or tungsten in their products to investigate these raw materials’ origin, and to mitigate risks in their
supply
chains in line with the OECD Guidance if they are found to originate in certain conflict-affected or high-risk areas.
In other words, the package ignores the very ingredients needed to lay the groundwork for balanced and sustainable future growth patterns, characterized by high economic and social productivity trajectories supported by both the
supply
side and the demand side (including investment).
Europe’s central bankers fear that their political masters will order them to loosen monetary policy, that the structural reforms needed to free up aggregate
supply
will not be forthcoming, and that the result will be a return to the inflation of the 1970’s.
Elsewhere, rail links between China and Vietnam, road developments connecting India and Bangladesh, and new ports, harbors, and pipelines in Myanmar and Pakistan are forging a new form of economic unity alongside the region’s manufacturing
supply
chains.
The key to ending the European crisis is a stimulus plan that addresses deficiencies on both the
supply
and demand sides.
But it has ample scope for expanding the
supply
of personal and business services for a desperately underserved, increasingly prosperous domestic market.
Accountants, architects, attorneys, and engineers all then jump on the bandwagon, using restrictive licensing requirements to limit supply, competition, and foreign entry.
And, in the case of rapidly developing economies like China, renewable-energy deployment is not replacing fossil fuels at all; instead, renewables are supplementing a constrained fuel
supply
to facilitate faster economic growth.
Given the need for further economic restructuring – and in view of long-term demographic trends, which will reduce the labor
supply
– pre-2008 growth rates are unlikely to be restored.
Granted, countries with limited resources cannot
supply
their hospitals with the full repertoire of infection controls available in wealthier nations.
Demand or
Supply?
CHICAGO – Economics is all about demand and
supply.
But, with high and persistent levels of unemployment in the United States, there is a real question about the nature of the problem: is aggregate demand too low, or are there problems with
supply?
Eventually, better labor-force
supply
will create healthier and more sustainable demand.
Whereas short-term demand largely dictates an economy’s real growth rate, its potential growth rate is determined on the
supply
side.
Yet another problem with the BAT is that it would create massive disruptions in the global
supply
chains that the US corporate sector has built over the last few decades.
Once the true value of our natural resources is understood, rather than taken for granted as if there were an infinitely available supply, the vital importance of conserving biodiversity should be better recognized.
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